Nothing. You cannot cross these two distinct species. However, the wallaroo is another species altogether, being somewhere in between the size of kangaroos and wallabies. Wallaroos are heavier-set, with stocky bodies, and distinctive dark facial and foreleg markings.
There is no animal that is a cross between the kangaroo and the wallaby. Although both members of the kangaroo family, each is an entirely separate species, and they cannot interbreed. The wallaroo, another member of the kangaroo family, is a separate species again, even though its name seems to be a cross between 'wallaby' and 'kangaroo'. In size, it is smaller and much stockier than a kangaroo, but considerably larger and heavier than any species of wallaby.
The wallaby is the smallest of the three. However, they are all members of the kangaroo family, and the smallest kangaroo is the musky rat-kangaroo: in which case, the kangaroo is the smallest.
No, it is in-between a wallaby and a kangaroo. All three are in the same genus.
Kangaroo, wallaby
A wallaby is a marsupial that resembles a kangaroo. A wallabee is a type of shoe.
A wallaby is a smaller member of the kangaroo family, native to Australia.
An antilopine wallaby is another name for an antilopine kangaroo - a species of kangaroo found in northern Australia.
There is no animal that is a cross between the kangaroo and the wallaby. Although both members of the kangaroo family, each is an entirely separate species, and they cannot interbreed. The wallaroo, another member of the kangaroo family, is a separate species again, even though its name seems to be a cross between 'wallaby' and 'kangaroo'. In size, it is smaller and much stockier than a kangaroo, but considerably larger and heavier than any species of wallaby.
No. For many years, the quokka was thought to be a wallaby, and some sources still list it as the smallest species of wallaby. It is not a wallaby, however, and has recently been given its own classification.
A baby kangaroo is called a Joey in all English-speaking countries. It is no different in Australia, where the young kangaroo is also called a joey. This is the name for young marsupials of all species.
The wallaby is the smallest of the three. However, they are all members of the kangaroo family, and the smallest kangaroo is the musky rat-kangaroo: in which case, the kangaroo is the smallest.
Marsupials that live in Australia include:kangaroo (Red kangaroo, Eastern Grey, Western Grey)tree kangaroowallarookoalawombatTasmanian devilwallaby (e.g. swamp wallaby, rock wallaby, hare-wallaby)bilbybandicootquollquokkapademelonpotoroonumbat (does not have a pouch)possum (quite different to the North American opossum)sugar glider and other glidersphascogale / tuan / wambengerdunnartantechinus (including the Little red kaluta) and false antechinusrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat, which is not a marsupial)bettongcuscuskultarrmulgaraningauidibblerplanigalebettongkowarimarsupial moleboodiewoylie
Marsupials that live in Australia include:kangaroo (Red kangaroo, Eastern Grey, Western Grey)tree kangaroowallarookoalawombatTasmanian devilwallaby (e.g. swamp wallaby, rock wallaby, hare-wallaby)bilbybandicootquollquokkapademelonpotoroonumbat (does not have a pouch)possum (quite different to the North American opossum)sugar glider and other glidersphascogale / tuan / wambengerdunnartantechinus (including the Little red kaluta) and false antechinusrat-kangaroo (not kangaroo-rat, which is not a marsupial)bettongcuscuskultarrmulgaraningauidibblerplanigalebettongkowarimarsupial moleboodiewoylie
The kangaroo is not an endangered species anywhere in Australia. Kangaroos are considered pests by farmers in many parts of Australia, and limited licences for culling have been applied within some areas. Other smaller members of the kangaroo and wallaby family are endangered. These include the Bridle nail-tailed wallaby, the pygmy rock wallaby, Gilbert's potoroo, long-footed potoroo and Northern bettong.
Kangaroos and wallabies cannot be crossed. Although they are both macropods and members of the kangaroo family, the two species cannot interbreed. Some might believe a wallaroo is a cross between the two, but it is not, as it is another distinct species.
The traditional food of Australia was bush food. These included wallaby, kangaroo, emu, bush berries, fruits and lizards among others.
Some of the endangered animals in Australia are the banded hare wallaby, the central rock rat, and the bridled nail-tailed wallaby. Some other animals on Australia's endangered list are the numbat, the Tasmanian forester kangaroo, and the Tasmanian tiger.